Emily Dickinson's grotesque : ambivalent interactions with uncertainty
Emily Dickinson's work can be understood in terms of dynamic and variable interactions with uncertainty. Sometimes uncertainty is horrifyingly meaningless, whilst on other occasions it is liberating and meaningful; Dickinson's grotesque is predicated upon the interplay of both these perspe...
Main Author: | Sedgwick, James Martin |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Warwick
2001
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.524498 |
Similar Items
-
Lyric realism to Epic consciousness : poetic subjectivity in the work of Edward Dorn
by: Armstrong, John Patrick
Published: (2008) -
'Then came a departure' : writing loss in the Middle Generation
by: Hawthorn, Ruth
Published: (2012) -
Sarah Piatt and the politics of mourning
by: Frank, Lucy Elizabeth
Published: (2003) -
Irony and distance in John Crowe Ransom's poetry : a computer-assisted study
by: El-Komy, Amir
Published: (2004) -
"Sully" : a sequence of poems exploring the Eastern New England accent, and an essay examining them in context
by: Najemy, Phil
Published: (2014)